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Anthony Haden-Guest
Anthony Haden-Guest (born 2 February 1937) is an English-American writer, reporter, cartoonist, art critic, poet, and socialite who lives in New York City and London. He is a frequent contributor to major magazines and has had several books published.
Born in Paris, Haden-Guest is the son of Peter Haden-Guest, a United Nations diplomat who later became the 4th Baron Haden-Guest. His mother was Elisabeth Haden-Guest, née Louise Ruth Wolpert. As Haden-Guest was born before his parents' marriage, upon his father's death the peerage passed to his younger half-brother, Christopher Guest, a comedian, actor, writer, director, musician and Grammy Award-winning composer.
A humorous blurb on the back cover of The Chronicles of Now, a book of Haden-Guest's cartoons, reads as follows:
Boring, pompous, and a complete and utter waste of time. I don't know what my brother was thinking.
—Christopher Guest.
Through Christopher Guest, Haden-Guest is brother-in-law of actress Jamie Lee Curtis. Due to the laws of peerage, the barony cannot be passed to children who are adopted, as are Christopher Guest's daughters. Therefore, the heir presumptive to the barony is actor Nicholas Guest, younger half-brother of Anthony and brother to Christopher. He also has a half-sister, Elissa Haden Guest.
Haden-Guest formerly penned a weekend column on art collection for the Financial Times and was the original male voice on Cristina's single "Disco Clone". His drawings have appeared in The New York Observer and he has contributed articles and stories to The Sunday Telegraph, Vanity Fair, The New Yorker, The Paris Review, Whitehot Magazine, The Sunday Times, Esquire, GQ (UK), The Observer, Radar and other major publications.
In 1979 he was awarded a New York Emmy Award for writing and narrating the PBS documentary The Affluent Immigrants. He also wrote Down the Programmed Rabbit-Hole, a collection of essays on 1970s corporate figures.
Haden-Guest frequently turns to upscale Manhattan social life for his subject matter as seen in the following sample of his work from Rolling Stone:
Anthony Haden-Guest
Anthony Haden-Guest (born 2 February 1937) is an English-American writer, reporter, cartoonist, art critic, poet, and socialite who lives in New York City and London. He is a frequent contributor to major magazines and has had several books published.
Born in Paris, Haden-Guest is the son of Peter Haden-Guest, a United Nations diplomat who later became the 4th Baron Haden-Guest. His mother was Elisabeth Haden-Guest, née Louise Ruth Wolpert. As Haden-Guest was born before his parents' marriage, upon his father's death the peerage passed to his younger half-brother, Christopher Guest, a comedian, actor, writer, director, musician and Grammy Award-winning composer.
A humorous blurb on the back cover of The Chronicles of Now, a book of Haden-Guest's cartoons, reads as follows:
Boring, pompous, and a complete and utter waste of time. I don't know what my brother was thinking.
—Christopher Guest.
Through Christopher Guest, Haden-Guest is brother-in-law of actress Jamie Lee Curtis. Due to the laws of peerage, the barony cannot be passed to children who are adopted, as are Christopher Guest's daughters. Therefore, the heir presumptive to the barony is actor Nicholas Guest, younger half-brother of Anthony and brother to Christopher. He also has a half-sister, Elissa Haden Guest.
Haden-Guest formerly penned a weekend column on art collection for the Financial Times and was the original male voice on Cristina's single "Disco Clone". His drawings have appeared in The New York Observer and he has contributed articles and stories to The Sunday Telegraph, Vanity Fair, The New Yorker, The Paris Review, Whitehot Magazine, The Sunday Times, Esquire, GQ (UK), The Observer, Radar and other major publications.
In 1979 he was awarded a New York Emmy Award for writing and narrating the PBS documentary The Affluent Immigrants. He also wrote Down the Programmed Rabbit-Hole, a collection of essays on 1970s corporate figures.
Haden-Guest frequently turns to upscale Manhattan social life for his subject matter as seen in the following sample of his work from Rolling Stone:
